Chiefs claim QB Orton off waivers

The Associated Press

Wednesday

Nov 23, 2011 at 2:31 PM

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kyle Orton has a new home in the AFC West.

Orton was claimed off waivers Wednesday by the Kansas City Chiefs, who were searching for a veteran quarterback after losing Matt Cassel to a season-ending injury, a person familiar with the situation told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the team hadn’t announced the move.

Orton was released by the Denver Broncos on Tuesday, six weeks after he was benched following a 1-4 start. The former Chicago Bears starter, who passed for 3,000 yards each of his first two seasons in Denver, became expendable when the Broncos opted to go with Tim Tebow as their starter.

The Chiefs will be responsible for approximately $2.5 million remaining on Orton’s nearly $8.9 million salary this season, but they had plenty of space under the salary cap to make the move. Orton can become a free agent after this season.

Several other teams were reportedly interested in Orton, including the Bears, but the Chiefs were No. 9 in the order of waiver priority and were able to land him. It’s unclear when he will report to the Chiefs, though he almost certainly won’t be available for Sunday’s game against Pittsburgh.

That means Kansas City will again start journeyman Tyler Palko, who was serviceable in his first NFL start Monday night at New England. He finished 24 of 37 for 230 yards, but his three interceptions contributed to what turned into a 34-3 rout.

"He never had a look that disturbed me before, after, during the game," Haley said. "I know playing that position, there’s no greater test, and getting thrown in to the fire on Monday night and, oh, by the way, six days later playing Pittsburgh, it doesn’t get any harder."

Now it appears that Palko will have to fend off Orton to keep the starting job.

Orton, a former Purdue star, was a fourth-round draft pick and appeared on the way to stardom when he assumed the Bears’ starting job for 15 games as a rookie, winning 10 of them.

Often saddled with a reputation for being moody, Orton was demoted his second season in favor of veteran Brian Griese. He earned the starting job back late in 2007 and started 15 games for the Bears in 2008, passing for 2,972 yards with 18 touchdowns and 10 interceptions.

His stock never higher, Orton was traded along with a package of draft picks to Denver for Pro Bowl quarterback Jay Cutler. In a curious twist of fate, it was an injury to Cutler that sparked Chicago’s interest in claiming its former starter off waivers.

Orton excelled his first two seasons in Denver in an offense run by Josh McDaniels, throwing for 7,455 yards and 41 touchdowns with 21 interceptions.

McDaniels was fired late last season, though, and while Orton remained the starter when John Fox took over, this season got off to a bumpy start. Denver lost four of its first five games, and Fox eventually went with Tebow as his starter, effectively demoting Orton to the third string.

Orton’s career numbers bear a striking resemblance to those of Cassel, who was hurt near the end of the Chiefs’ 17-10 loss to Denver two weeks ago. Orton’s completed about 58 percent of his passes while making 66 career starts, with 79 touchdowns and 55 interceptions.

Cassel has started 54 games, completing 59 percent of his throws with 76 TDs and 46 picks.

The Chiefs, who are in the midst of a three-game skid that has threatened to eliminate them from contention in the AFC West, will try to get Orton up to speed quickly.

After facing the Steelers on Sunday night, they visit Chicago and the New York Jets, before returning home to face the defending Super Bowl champion Green Bay. A division game against Oakland follows before wrapping up the season at Denver, a game that suddenly has a few more story lines.

"Good for him. Congratulations to him. That will be fun to play him the last game of the year," Tebow said after learning that Orton had been claimed by Kansas City. "Obviously he knows (Denver’s offense) pretty well, so he could probably give away a few things, but I think we’ll be OK."

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